"One should either write ruthlessly what one believes to be the truth, or else shut up." — Arthur Koestler

WARNING:This video is filled with profanity. What it documents — including pedophilia-themed Twitter attacks against children of a Tea Party supporter — involves a network of “progressive” activists apparently organized by Neal Rauhauser, whose firm, Progressive PST, has been hired by many Democratic candidates.

The video says the purpose is to “illustrate that Neal Rauhauser was soliciting some of the worst provocateurs he could find in an effort to deliberately elicit angered responses from the Tea Party.” It features screen captures of Tweets by several activists alleged to have been part of Rauhauser’s network. Conservative blogger Greg W. Howard was especially targeted for Twitter harassment. (Warning: Extremely graphic language.)

One of the most relentlessly obscene of the Twitter activists involved in this harassment campaign was “GuerrillaWLogic.” Neal Rauhauser (“Stranded Wind”) communicated with “GuerrillaWLogic,” saying he was “hiring a replacement” for one of his assistants.

“GuerrillaWLogic” seemed to delight in making obscene attacks on Christian conservatives:

“GuerrillaWLogic” bragged that he used an online charity site to “buy” an abortion in honor of one pro-life blogger who “annoyed” him.

This effort by “GuerrillaWLogic” was praised by abortion-rights activist Kelsea McLain (“ProChoiceLove”).

The video identifies some of the Twitter activists whom Rauhauser dubbed his “Beans” or “Legumes of Mass Destruction.” The Twitter campaign against Tea Party activists appears to have begun after the July “Netroots Nation” convention, sponsored by DailyKos.com, at which Rauhauser was a speaker.

It was at Netroots Nation that Rauhauser’s partner in Progressive PST, Beth Becker, says she met Arizona Democrat Rep. Raul Grijalva, co-chairman of the Congressional Progressive Caucus. In a Sept. 30 post at DailyKos, Becker (“Spedwybabs”) said she was “working with Rep. Grijalva’s office on a number of things, including helping them to navigate this world we call the blogosphere.”

Rauhauser attributed these threats to “Tea Party Patriot extremists” and “a Christian Reconstructionist cell in the southeast,” and said he was targeted because he had “been effectively organizing on Twitter and in the blogosphere.”